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Wynnstay is a country house within an important landscaped park 1.3 km (0.75 miles) south-east of Ruabon, near Wrexham, Wales. Wynnstay, previously Watstay, is a famous estate and the family seat of the Williams-Wynn baronets. The house was sold in 1948 and is under private ownership as of 2000. Wynnstay, 1793
See more images Dolwen Ceiriog Ucha SJ1443633896 52°53′45″N 3°16′24″W / 52.8956974234°N 3.273351238031°W / 52.8956974234; -3.273351238031 (Dolwen) 20 October 1952 House Located off a lane which runs W from the main crossroads in Llanarmon Dyffryn Ceiriog, following the River Ceiriog. The house is in a fine position on the N bank of the river with the hills rising ...
Name Location Grid Ref. [note 1] Geo-coordinates Date Listed Type/Function Notes Reference Number Image 10 Park Street: Ruabon SJ3038743740: 22 February 1995 Domestic [3] 15705 – 12 Park Street: Ruabon SJ3039043737
In the United Kingdom, the term listed building refers to a building or other structure officially designated as being of special architectural, historical, or cultural significance; Grade II structures are those considered to be "buildings of special interest which justify every effort being made to preserve them". [1]
Pen-Y-Lan Hall is a grade II listed [11] Regency Gothic mansion located in Ruabon near Wrexham in Wales. It was built in 1690 by the founder of Lloyds Bank and was bought by the Holloway family in 1849, since when the house has passed down five generations of the family. The current owner, Emma Holloway, has lived in the house all her life and ...
Ruabon (Welsh: Rhiwabon; pronounced [r̥ɪʊˈɑːbɔn]) is a village and community in Wrexham County Borough, Wales. The name comes from Rhiw Fabon , rhiw being the Welsh word for "slope" or "hillside" and Fabon being a mutation from St Mabon , the original church name, of earlier, Celtic origin.
Pen-y-Lan Hall is a Grade II-listed Tudor-Gothic Revival country house located near the village of Ruabon in Wrexham County Borough, Wales. The building may have been built in the late seventeenth century, but was remodelled in the mid-nineteenth.
Wynn Hall is a 17th-century house in the old hamlet of Bodylltyn in Ruabon, Wrexham, Wales standing at the junction of the Penycae Road and Plas Bennion Road.It was built in about 1649 by William Wynn and is a Grade II* listed building.